Do service departments give special treatment to customer's who bought their
car at that dealership or is every service customer treated the same
regardless of where they bought their car?
Re: Service Dept vs Sales Dept: Special Treatment?
"Bryan" <bryan.459@pac.bell.net> wrote in message
news:6ED2g.74452$dW3.7499@newssvr21.news.prodigy.com...[color=blue]
> Do service departments give special treatment to customer's who bought
> their car at that dealership or is every service customer treated the same
> regardless of where they bought their car?[/color]
Usually they treat everyone the same. They try to empty your wallet as fast
as possible. Also, they like nothing better than to take business away from
another dealer.
If you are talking about warranty problems with a new car during the first
few months, then you might get better service where you bought it,
especially if you had to complain to the Sales Manager. Beyond that I would
not worry about it.
If you are thinking of buying a new car some place other than where you will
get it serviced, then make sure you tell the salesman that the dealer
sticker/nameplate must be removed (or not put on in the first place).
Otherwise, tell the salesman that you will have to purchase a new car at a
dealer closer to home where you will get it serviced.
Also, remember that every dealership and every employee of the dealer is a
little different in how they treat customers.
Re: Service Dept vs Sales Dept: Special Treatment?
"Bryan" <bryan.459@pac.bell.net> wrote in message
news:6ED2g.74452$dW3.7499@newssvr21.news.prodigy.com...[color=blue]
> Do service departments give special treatment to customer's who bought
> their car at that dealership or is every service customer treated the same
> regardless of where they bought their car?
>[/color]
I think it depends on what condition your trade was in when you bought your
car.
mark_
Re: Service Dept vs Sales Dept: Special Treatment?
"Mark A" <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote in message
news:h5WdnTwfh9sdlNbZnZ2dnUVZ_tCdnZ2d@comcast.com...[color=blue]
> "Bryan" <bryan.459@pac.bell.net> wrote in message
> news:6ED2g.74452$dW3.7499@newssvr21.news.prodigy.com...[color=green]
>> Do service departments give special treatment to customer's who bought
>> their car at that dealership or is every service customer treated the
>> same regardless of where they bought their car?[/color]
>
> Usually they treat everyone the same. They try to empty your wallet as
> fast as possible. Also, they like nothing better than to take business
> away from another dealer.
>
> If you are talking about warranty problems with a new car during the first
> few months, then you might get better service where you bought it,
> especially if you had to complain to the Sales Manager. Beyond that I
> would not worry about it.
>
> If you are thinking of buying a new car some place other than where you
> will get it serviced, then make sure you tell the salesman that the dealer
> sticker/nameplate must be removed (or not put on in the first place).
> Otherwise, tell the salesman that you will have to purchase a new car at a
> dealer closer to home where you will get it serviced.
>
> Also, remember that every dealership and every employee of the dealer is a
> little different in how they treat customers.
>[/color]
Great answer! You answered all the questions I was considering. I was
wondering about buying the car where I get the best price even if it's not
at my local dealer.
Re: Service Dept vs Sales Dept: Special Treatment?
Mark A <nobody@nowhere.com> writes:
[color=blue]
> If you are thinking of buying a new car some place other than where
> you will get it serviced, then make sure you tell the salesman that
> the dealer sticker/nameplate must be removed (or not put on in the
> first place).[/color]
Why? If the service being done is under warranty, the dealership
would be comped by the manufacturer for the expense; it isn't as
though Dealership B would be assuming an expense that was rightfully
that of Dealership A, where the car was purchased. And if it weren't
a warrantly issue, the customer would be paying the costs (on which
the dealership would be making a profit), anyway.
Or are you suggesting that a dealership's service department would
be offended by seeing a car with a sticker/nameplate from another
dealership on it, and would jeopardize their reputation by giving
poor service out of spite?
I've heard of people insisting that a dealership remove their sticker
or nameplate as a condition of sale, or not apply it in the first
place -- but for aesthetic reasons. Or because the metal plates
that were often pop-riveted onto trunk lids in the days before the
stick-on plastic sort that are used now were potential sources of
rust, especially in parts of the country where salt is used on the
roads in the wintertime.
Those things aren't common in my area; they seem to be big in the
American Midwest and South, though. Some of them are downright
unsightly. There's a dealership (or possibly a chain of dealer-
ships ) in Texas called David McDavid, who apply these enormous
medallions shaped like the state of Texas to the backs of the cars
they sell. I'd never stand for something like that being on a new
car that I bought. Unless, of course, the dealership were willing
to give me a discount on my car's selling price in return for its
being a rolling billboard advertising their business...
Here on the West Coast, dealerships usually settle for plastic
license-plate frames with their names and locations on them.
Sometimes if you take a car in for service at another dealership
they'll swap the original frame for one of their own for a bit
of cheap advertising, but that doesn't seem to be as common as
it used to be. As touchy as people are about petty stuff nowa-
days, maybe they started getting complaints about the practice.
One interesting regional variation, common in the Southwest, is
for the diamond-plate rear bumpers of pickup trucks to be engraved
with a dealership's name and town, usually in red paint.
Geoff
--
"Support Darwinian evolution -- squash a weakling today."
-- David Wren-Hardin
Re: Service Dept vs Sales Dept: Special Treatment?
"Geoff Miller" <geoffm@u1.netgate.net> wrote in message
news:e2ggfv$fhh@u1.netgate.net...[color=blue]
>
> Why? If the service being done is under warranty, the dealership
> would be comped by the manufacturer for the expense; it isn't as
> though Dealership B would be assuming an expense that was rightfully
> that of Dealership A, where the car was purchased. And if it weren't
> a warrantly issue, the customer would be paying the costs (on which
> the dealership would be making a profit), anyway.
>
> Or are you suggesting that a dealership's service department would
> be offended by seeing a car with a sticker/nameplate from another
> dealership on it, and would jeopardize their reputation by giving
> poor service out of spite?
>[/color]
Dealers do get paid by the manufacturer to perform warranty repairs, but the
labor rate is much less than non-warranty work. If the dealer has to turn
away non-warranty repairs to do your warranty work, then they will not be
happy campers. There is no way any service department can survive on
warranty repairs alone. I would not worry too much about it, although maybe
if one has a warranty problem in the first few months it might be advisable
to take it to the dealer where you bought it.
[color=blue]
> I've heard of people insisting that a dealership remove their sticker
> or nameplate as a condition of sale, or not apply it in the first
> place -- but for aesthetic reasons.
> Geoff
>[/color]
Yes, the main reason for not having the dealer nameplate is for aesthetic
reasons, but if you purchase the car a bit far away from home (and expect to
get it serviced at a dealer closer to home) then this is the perfect excuse
to tell the salesman why you must have it removed (or not put on in the
first place).
Re: Service Dept vs Sales Dept: Special Treatment?
In article <e2ggfv$fhh@u1.netgate.net>,
[email]geoffm@u1.netgate.net[/email] (Geoff Miller) wrote:
[color=blue]
> If the service being done is under warranty, the dealership
> would be comped by the manufacturer for the expense; it isn't as
> though Dealership B would be assuming an expense that was rightfully
> that of Dealership A, where the car was purchased.[/color]
yeah, but warranty work pays less than customer pay work.
Re: Service Dept vs Sales Dept: Special Treatment?
"Bryan" <bryan.459@pac.bell.net> wrote in message
news:6ED2g.74452$dW3.7499@newssvr21.news.prodigy.com...[color=blue]
> Do service departments give special treatment to customer's who bought
> their car at that dealership or is every service customer treated the same
> regardless of where they bought their car?[/color]
If you find a dealership that you like and you feel good about getting your
car serviced there , If they treat you well and provide honest repairs ( I
know , I'm dreaming ) I would purchase my vehicle there even if it were a
few hundred dollars more then some other dealer .[color=blue]
>[/color]
Re: Service Dept vs Sales Dept: Special Treatment?
"Bryan" <bryan.459@pac.bell.net> wrote in message
news:6ED2g.74452$dW3.7499@newssvr21.news.prodigy.com...[color=blue]
> Do service departments give special treatment to customer's who bought
> their car at that dealership or is every service customer treated the same
> regardless of where they bought their car?[/color]
Dealership owners used to give preferential treatment to customers who
purchased the vehicle new from them, however, that attititude is mostly a
thing of the past.
As some people have mentioned, the new vehicle warranty will be honored at
any franchised Toyota dealership. The scenario that a service department
may service an out-of-dealership warranty customer after they take care of
customer pay work is not very realistic. because service departments are
generally not running that close to capacity and would be a violation of the
dealership's franchise agreement with Toyota.
A reputable service department will gladly service your vehicle, no matter
where it was purchased.
I purchase our vehicles from a dealer that is some distance from my home
because I've established a relationship with the dealer - Between my dad,
sister, and me, we've purchased at least 2 dozen new vehicles in the past 20
years, partly as employee purchases, and my dad and I send them at least a
dozen referrals a year. There is a Toyota dealership less than a 1/4 mile
from my house where we go for some service, and we have never had any
problems getting the vehicle serviced.
--
Re: Service Dept vs Sales Dept: Special Treatment?
"Ray O" <rokigawa@tristarassociatesDOTcomn> wrote in message
news:8351c$444c3a5f$180fead6$26903@msgid.meganewsservers.com...[color=blue]
>
> "Bryan" <bryan.459@pac.bell.net> wrote in message
> news:6ED2g.74452$dW3.7499@newssvr21.news.prodigy.com...[color=green]
>> Do service departments give special treatment to customer's who bought
>> their car at that dealership or is every service customer treated the
>> same regardless of where they bought their car?[/color]
>
> Dealership owners used to give preferential treatment to customers who
> purchased the vehicle new from them, however, that attititude is mostly a
> thing of the past.
>
> As some people have mentioned, the new vehicle warranty will be honored at
> any franchised Toyota dealership. The scenario that a service department
> may service an out-of-dealership warranty customer after they take care of
> customer pay work is not very realistic. because service departments are
> generally not running that close to capacity and would be a violation of
> the dealership's franchise agreement with Toyota.
>
> A reputable service department will gladly service your vehicle, no matter
> where it was purchased.
>
> I purchase our vehicles from a dealer that is some distance from my home
> because I've established a relationship with the dealer - Between my dad,
> sister, and me, we've purchased at least 2 dozen new vehicles in the past
> 20 years, partly as employee purchases, and my dad and I send them at
> least a dozen referrals a year. There is a Toyota dealership less than a
> 1/4 mile from my house where we go for some service, and we have never had
> any problems getting the vehicle serviced.
> --
>
> Ray O
> (correct punctuation to reply)
>[/color]
Thanks for all the discussion. I was curious about the possibility of
searching far and wide for a great deal on my next cars. People move.
Their cars go with them. It wouldn't make sense for a dealer to not take
care of a "foreign" customer; there are too many other "shops" that would
gladly do the work.
Re: Service Dept vs Sales Dept: Special Treatment?
"Bryan" <bryan.459@pac.bell.net> wrote in message
news:O_Z2g.74595$dW3.18632@newssvr21.news.prodigy.com...[color=blue]
>
> "Ray O" <rokigawa@tristarassociatesDOTcomn> wrote in message
> news:8351c$444c3a5f$180fead6$26903@msgid.meganewsservers.com...[color=green]
>>
>> "Bryan" <bryan.459@pac.bell.net> wrote in message
>> news:6ED2g.74452$dW3.7499@newssvr21.news.prodigy.com...[color=darkred]
>>> Do service departments give special treatment to customer's who bought
>>> their car at that dealership or is every service customer treated the
>>> same regardless of where they bought their car?[/color]
>>
>> Dealership owners used to give preferential treatment to customers who
>> purchased the vehicle new from them, however, that attititude is mostly a
>> thing of the past.
>>
>> As some people have mentioned, the new vehicle warranty will be honored
>> at any franchised Toyota dealership. The scenario that a service
>> department may service an out-of-dealership warranty customer after they
>> take care of customer pay work is not very realistic. because service
>> departments are generally not running that close to capacity and would be
>> a violation of the dealership's franchise agreement with Toyota.
>>
>> A reputable service department will gladly service your vehicle, no
>> matter where it was purchased.
>>
>> I purchase our vehicles from a dealer that is some distance from my home
>> because I've established a relationship with the dealer - Between my
>> dad, sister, and me, we've purchased at least 2 dozen new vehicles in the
>> past 20 years, partly as employee purchases, and my dad and I send them
>> at least a dozen referrals a year. There is a Toyota dealership less
>> than a 1/4 mile from my house where we go for some service, and we have
>> never had any problems getting the vehicle serviced.
>> --
>>
>> Ray O
>> (correct punctuation to reply)
>>[/color]
>
> Thanks for all the discussion. I was curious about the possibility of
> searching far and wide for a great deal on my next cars. People move.
> Their cars go with them. It wouldn't make sense for a dealer to not take
> care of a "foreign" customer; there are too many other "shops" that would
> gladly do the work.
>[/color]
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